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This year, that all changes, with two new artist albums - Hello Waveforms and Cellcloud.
Having arrived in the
warmth of Orbit's West End hotel room from the wintry
cold, sitting opposite is a relaxed, genial man with a
creative glint in his eye.
Orbit's base is not far from London's hub, but he
was born in the East. "I grew up in Shoreditch and
Hackney, where we moved. My parents were both
teachers, and we gradually migrated north, moving up
to Palmers Green. I left home at 16, so found my
way quite young, and since then I've lived mostly in
America and London. I find home is where the laptop is
these days!"
Orbit, real name William Wainwright, grew up with
classical music "a lot. That was all we heard at home,
as my parents were quite at odds with pop music. When
they listened to classical, pieces like Mozart's
Eine Kleine Nachtmusik made them happy. I
didn't have a musical education, but did listen to
music a lot. It's still not an easy topic, music, and
my parents are still purist about it, but I find in
terms of style I'm moving towards them rather than
them moving towards me."
So when Orbit wrote Pieces In
A Modern Style (its original release was hampered by
copyright issues) presumably he was aware of its
potential to tap into the tension between popular and
classical music. "I'm aware of a lot of awful car
crashes when they've collided before, in particular
the 'Symphony for rock group and orchestra' syndrome.
"I also didn't want to choose repertoire that was
over-familiar, as pieces of music kind of write
themselves off because of that. It was a trick to find
something that strikes a chord, just a conduit for the
composition. Although, having said that, I did put a
few bleeps in, which is something I've got better at
but find almost impossible to resist!"
The choice of repertoire included music from Arvo
Part and Gorecki, and the two composers had
contrasting reactions to his arrangements. "Arvo Part
was rather negative. When I was going to perform at
the Queen Elizabeth Hall he forbade us from doing it -
part of the huge control that exists over who performs
works. Gorecki was very sympathetic about it though,
he was amazing.
"I've listened to all the
Graham Coxon records recently, have realised
just how great they are!"
- William Orbit bigs up the former Blur axeman
"We had a conversation where we kind of
spoke in French, and he could easily have not let me
use his music but he was happy to do so." With Arvo
Part, however, Orbit's view of his music remains
unaltered. "The fact he wouldn't let me do it doesn't
change the fact that I'm a huge fan, and I did
actually get his autograph. His music is highly
spiritual, and the Russian Orthodox informs most of it
for real. I think he's on his own plane - if you
listen to Cantus In Memoriam Benjamin Britten
it just takes you to another place, and I defy anybody
not to experience that."
Other arrangements of classical music played a
part. "Yes, I listened to Wendy Carlos and the
Expanding Head Band. I also used to listen to
John Peel under the bedclothes with those little pink
headphones that used to be around. I remember when it
was just Radio Luxembourg, Caroline, the Home Service
and the Light Programme. Bob Harris now sounds really
MOR compared to, like, grime tunes on Radio 2!"
So
does he like grime? "I'm aware of it. One collaborator
of mine is Verb T, who's very much part of the
UK hip hop scene. I like British rap music, it's
getting pretty good right now, although it's not a
field I would write in."
Discussing the new album Cellcloud, due for release in May, Orbit talks of his
satisfaction with the finished product. "It feels
really good to have an album out, and especially good
to have a binary album."
The record is roughly half
vocal, half instrumental. Orbit talks of "getting
frustrated with singers, but I love working with them.
Two of the tracks on the album, They Live In The Sky
and Spirals, we're putting acappella versions of them
on the website. That's the beautiful thing about
websites and the web. The website is almost like a
third album as well."
"I had
it lucky, as she'd just come off Evita where she'd had
vocal tuition..."
- William Orbit on Madonna
Orbit has his own multitrack
facility on his artist website, but while a huge asset
it has proved less than easy to set up. "I love the multitrack zone - it's
an aspect of it all. It's actually
quite hard making a multitrack, you've got to make it
so it doesn't crash the computer! To make it easy and
fun is really hard, you get a lot of websites with
audio tools that have a great look but don't end up
doing that much. What I want is a musical experience,
not a software hacking experience!"
Anyone pigeon-holing Orbit as 'ambient' would do
well to listen to his remix of Blur's On Your Own, a
riff-driven industrial barrage that blows the windows
wide open. So how did they react? "Well they were all
smiling, they weren't insulted! I think that planted
the seed for my work with them on the album. I guess
they were associated with the principle of breaking
some rules.
"The band wanted so much to have the rock'n'roll experience, to explode in all directions at
once. I love the fact with them that when you first
hear something new from Damon or Graham there's often
a sense of puzzlement, and sometimes an underwhelming
feeling that then grows into realising they're
fantastic pieces of music. I've listened to all the
Graham Coxon records recently, have realised
just how great they are!"
Moving on to Madonna, he modestly notes that "I had
it lucky, as she'd just come off Evita where she'd had
vocal tuition, and so we were able to try something
like the song Ray Of Light. It's just a semitone
higher than she's comfortable with but we thought the
strain really helped. She got frustrated when we were
recording but you want that bit of edge with singers,
that thing of reaching. You can't fake it, and you can
hear it when she cracks it on the record. Live, she
has to sing it very slightly lower, with all the
dancing and everything going on."
"I think Mutya's got a fantastic voice, it's a
shame she left."
- William Orbit on changing personnel in Sugababes
Ray Of Light was closely followed by the All
Saints single Pure Shores, as used in The
Beach. Orbit's work with the Sugababes on
this album is bound to draw comparisons, but the track
(Spiral) is much more deeply felt.
"It's really
personal. It was originally going to be on their
record, but somehow it slipped through the net. I
didn't put it on just because it was the Sugababes
though. I think Mutya's got a fantastic voice, it's a
shame she left. But then I think Keisha's vocal on
verse two is one of the best vocals I've heard! It
took a lot of takes to get right but the more I've
listened to it the better I think it is!"
A satisfied man, then - Orbit is enjoying his time
as a solo artist once again, though he's never short
of production offers. "No, but it's much harder making
a solo record! I think it's like being a plumber,
fixing other people's music, but it's definitely much
harder with your own!"
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Mercury Prize 2009 nominees
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BUY William Orbit - Hello Waveforms
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